Barleywine
Knowing this really puts a card like the 8/Wands into perspective. It's not just speed, it's that the situation has gained limits (adjustments) that allow things to go super fast. Like, as per your bicycle, when the cyclist brings in arms, lowers the head, and gets into tight, racing position. It "limits" their freedom of movement, but in turn, allows for them to go much faster—and maintain control of the bike.
I had an eye-opening experience with the 8 of Wands in a public reading I did not long ago. In most decks the eight staves are all driving toward the same destination, in perfect formation. But I happened to be using the Connolly deck, in which the staves are flying all over the sky like someone is starting a game of "pick-up-sticks." It suggests "free-fall" more than "speed." I told my client the card looked ambivalent or "all up in the air" rather than accelerating toward a goal, an observation with which she readily agreed.